/ Stars that died in 2023

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Pedro Armendáriz, Jr., Mexican actor (Zorro series), died from cancer he was 71.


Pedro Armendáriz Pardo, better known as his stage name Pedro Armendáriz, Jr., was a Mexican actor who made films and television series from United States and Mexico died from cancer he was 71.

(April 6, 1940 – December 26, 2011)

Early life

Pedro Armendáriz Pardo was born in Mexico City, to the late Mexican-American actor Pedro Armendáriz and Carmela (née Pardo) Armendariz.[1]

Career

Armendáriz was appeared from the James Bond film, Licence to Kill as president Hector Lopez. He likes his favorite movie who is appearing all of his films: Amistad (1997), The Mask of Zorro (1998), The Mexican (2001), Original Sin (2001), In the Time of the Butterfiles (2001), Once Upon a Time in Mexico (2003), And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself (2003), The Legend of Zorro (2005), and Freelancers (2012).

Personal life

He had been married to actress Ofelia Medina.

Death

In November 2011, Pedro Armendáriz was diagnosed with lung cancer. On December 26, 2011, Armendáriz Jr. died of cancer at age 71 in New York City in a Memorial Hospital. He was buried in Panteón Jardín, Mexico City, Mexico.[2]

Filmography

Telenovelas

TV series


Pedro Armendáriz Jr in March 2011

Armendáriz in Guadalajara March 2010

Movies



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Houston Antwine, American football player (Boston/New England Patriots, Philadelphia Eagles), AFL All-Star (1963–1968), died from heart failure he was 72.

Houston J. Antwine  was a college and professional American football player from Southern Illinois University died from heart failure he was 72.. He was drafted by the American Football League's Houston Oilers, then traded to the Boston Patriots in 1961. He is in the Southern Illinois University Athletic Hall of Fame. A former NAIA wrestling champion, as a defensive tackle, the stocky "Twine" was nearly impossible to move out of the middle.

(April 11, 1939 – December 26, 2011)

Antwine was cited by fellow Hall of Famer Billy Shaw as one of the American Football League's best pass rushers, athletic and very quick on his feet. He usually drew double-team blocking. He was an American Football League All-Star six straight years, from 1963 through 1968, was named to the All-Time All-AFL Team, and to the Patriots All-1960s (AFL) Team.
Houston recorded 39 sacks, recovered 4 fumbles and had 1 interception in 142 regular season games for the Patriots. He returned an interception 2 yards on 12-12-65. Houston led the team in sacks in 1967, 1968 & 1969.
He was the AFL Defensive Player of the Week as he sacked Dan Darragh three times in the Patriots 16-7 win over the Buffalo Bills @ War Memorial Stadium on 09-08-68.
Antwine was awarded the game ball for his performance in the Patriots 26-10 win over the New York Jets @ Boston College Alumni Stadium on 09-27-64. He had a career high 10 tackles in the Patriots 33-14 win over the Cincinnati Bengals @ Fenway Park on 12-01-68.
He had four games with at least 2 sacks and recorded sacks of George Blanda Joe Namath, Len Dawson, Bob Griese, Fran Tarkenton & Johnny Unitas. He recovered fumbles by Paul Lowe, Darrell Lester, Bert Coan & Dennis Shaw.
Houston was an AFL All Star Defensive Tackle in 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967 & 1968.


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Simms Taback, American author, graphic artist and illustrator, died he was 79.

Simms Taback was an American writer, graphic artist, and illustrator of more than 35 books  died he was 79.. He won the 2000 Caldecott Medal for U.S. picture book illustration, recognizing Joseph Had a Little Overcoat, and was a runner-up in 1998 for There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly.[1]


(February 13, 1932 – December 25, 2011) 


Taback graduated from the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Art and served in the United States Army. He was a designer for CBS Records and The New York Times. He was the founder and president of the Illustrators Guild (later the New York Graphic Artists Guild) and taught art at the School of Visual Arts and Syracuse University.
Taback designed the first McDonalds Happy Meal box in 1977. He died in 2011 of pancreatic cancer.[2][3]

Selected works

  • Jabberwocky and other nonsense (Harlin Quist, 1964), three poems by Lewis Carroll, 1871 to 1889[4]
  • Too Much Noise (1967), by Ann McGovern
  • Joseph Had a Little Overcoat (Random House, 1977), movable book based on a Yiddish folk song[5]
  • Jason's Bus Ride (1987), by Harriet Ziefert
  • Road Builders (1994), by B. G. Hennessy
  • Sam's Wild West Show (1995), by Nancy Antle
  • Two Little Witches : a Halloween counting story (1996), by Harriet Ziefert
  • There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly (1998), illustrating the American folk poem[6]
  • Joseph Had a Little Overcoat (Viking, 1999)[7] —the Caldecott Medal-winning edition
  • This is the House that Jack Built (2002), based on the nursery rhyme
  • Kibitzers and Fools: tales my zayda (grandfather) told me (2005), traditional Jewish tales[6]
  • I Miss You Every Day (2007)


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Jim Sherwood, American musician (The Mothers of Invention), died he was 69.

Jim "Motorhead" Sherwood was an American rock musician notable for playing soprano, tenor and baritone saxophone, tambourine, vocals and vocal sound effects in Frank Zappa's Mothers of Invention died he was 69.. He appeared on all the albums of the original Mothers line-up and the 'posthumous' releases Burnt Weeny Sandwich and Weasels Ripped My Flesh, as well as certain subsequent Zappa albums. He also appeared in the films 200 Motels, Video from Hell and Uncle Meat.

(May 8, 1942 – December 25, 2011)

Biography

Sherwood was born in Arkansas City, Kansas. He and Zappa met in high school in 1956. Sherwood was in a class with Zappa's brother Bobby, who introduced the two after learning that Sherwood was a collector of blues records.[1] Sherwood sat in with Zappa's first band, R&B group The Black-Outs,[2] at various performances, where he was often a highlight.
Sherwood and Zappa subsequently played together in Ontario, in rock'n'roll/R&B group The Omens. Sherwood also played with the Blackouts in 1957-1962 and The Village Inn Band in 1965. Sherwood graduated from Berklee College of Music in Boston.[citation needed] After Zappa's first marriage began to break up in 1964, he bought local producer Paul Buff's Pal Recording Studio, renaming it "Studio Z", and he and Sherwood lived in the studio for a time.[1][3] Sherwood first joined The Mothers of Invention as a roadie and equipment manager, also contributing sound effects (using both his voice and saxophone) to their first album, 1966's Freak Out! He became a full member around the time of the group's experimental residence at the Garrick Theater in 1967, of which future bandmate Ruth Underwood, then an audience member, recalls that "there were some nights that you just heard pure music, and other nights, Motorhead'd be talking about fixing his car, with Jim Black's drum beat in the background".[4]
Zappa disbanded the original Mothers line-up in 1969. Sherwood was one of several members that would play for him again in subsequent years, appearing on 1981's You Are What You Is, the Läther box set, and the last album Zappa completed before his death, Civilization Phaze III. In 1971 Sherwood appeared the movie in 200 Motels as Larry Fanoga. In 1973, Sherwood played on For Real!, the first album of Los Angeles doo-wop group Ruben and the Jets, who Zappa had granted permission to use the name of his fictional group, also producing the record and contributing arrangements and the song "If I Could Only Be Your Love Again". Allmusic's Bruce Eder notes the record's "beautifully crafted breaks on sax"[5] by Sherwood and Robert "Buffalo" Roberts. Ruben and the Jets toured in support of Zappa on the West Coast in 1972 and produced one other album, but split after lead singer Rubén Guevara was offered a solo recording contract in the mid-1970s. There were also financial difficulties, Sherwood noting that the group played "too many benefits and not enough paying gigs".[5][not in citation given]
The nickname "Motorhead" was coined by fellow Mothers member Ray Collins, who observed that Sherwood always seemed to be working on repairing cars, trucks or motorcycles, and joked that "it sounds like you've got a little motor in your head".[1] Sherwood was also occasionally credited as his alter ego "Larry Fanoga"[6] or as "Fred Fanoga".[citation needed]
In later years, Sherwood contributed to various projects alongside his fellow Mothers alumni, including records by The Grandmothers, Mothers keyboardist Don Preston, Ant-Bee and Sandro Oliva.
In December 2011, Sherwood got very ill and died on the 25th of the same month.[7][8]

Discography

With the Mothers of Invention

With Frank Zappa

With Ruben and the Jets

With The Grandmothers

  • Grandmothers (Line, 1981)
  • Lookin' Up Granny's Dress (Rhino, 1982)
  • A Mother of an Anthology (One Way, 1993)

With Ant-Bee

  • Snorks & Wheezes (K7, 1993)
  • The @x!#*% of.... (K7, 1993)
  • With My Favorite "Vegetables" and Other Bizarre Music (Divine, 1994)
  • Lunar Musik (Divine Records, 1995)

With Don Preston

  • Vile Foamy Ectoplasm (Muffin, 1993)

With Sandro Oliva

  • Who the Fuck Is Sandro Oliva?!? (Muffin, 1995)

Filmography



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Sir Roger Jowell, British social statistician, died he was 69.


Professor Sir Roger Mark Jowell, CBE  was a British social statistician and academic died he was 69.. He founded Social and Community Planning Research (SCPR, now the National Centre for Social Research) and the Centre for Comparative Studies at City University. He played a leading role in the establishment of several of the UK’s leading social surveys, most famously the British Social Attitudes and the British Election Study. He made a major contribution to the development of robust comparative research through the International Social Survey Programme and the European Social Survey.


(26 March 1942 – 25 December 2011)

Early life

Roger Mark Jowell was born on 26 March 1942 in South Africa, the second son of Emily Katzenellenbogen and Jack Jowell. In his youth, he was active in left-wing politics becoming President of Cape Town’s Student Representative Council and Vice President of the National Union of South African Students.
"As soon as I graduated from the University of Cape Town in 1964, I came to Britain - initially just to gain a broader perspective on my life. It wasn't that I had to leave, although as President of the Students’ Union I’d been heavily involved in student politics and anti-apartheid activities. At that time students were more or less immune from prosecution. But then things changed, and a few months after I arrived in Britain I got word that many of my close friends had been arrested. I realised then that I couldn’t go back - it wouldn’t have been safe. Once I got my British passport, I was able to go back fairly regularly." [2]

Research career

In Britain, Jowell was active in anti-apartheid activities and in the Labour Party, becoming Alderman in Camden. He began his research career at Research Services Limited (RSL), mentored by Mark Abrams. In 1969, with Gerald Hoinville he founded the London-based Social & Community Planning Research (SCPR), which became the National Centre for Social Research [3], He led the organisation for over 30 years.[1]
At SCPR, Jowell established the long-running survey series British Social Attitudes and was closely involved as author and editor in its first nineteen annual reports. He co-directed the British Election Study from 1983 to 2000 and was the founding chair of the International Social Survey Programme from 1984 to 1989. His interest in high quality comparative research grew and in 2002, he established the European Social Survey alongside a group of leading international experts.

Academic life

In 2003, Jowell became Research Professor and Founder Director of the Centre for Comparative Social Surveys at City University, London from where he continued to lead the Central Coordinating Team of the European Social Survey until his death. The success of this ambitious 34 nation comparative study was recognised in 2005 when it was awarded the Descartes Prize for excellence in collaborative scientific research, the first time a social science venture has won Europe’s top annual science award. Jowell lectured and published widely.

Social science community

He made significant contributions to the social science community. In 1978 he initiated the establishment of the Social Research Association. In the 1980s he played a key role in developing a professional code of ethics through the International Statistical Institute, insisting that it should be an educative rather than a prescriptive code. In 2008 he became Deputy Chair of the board of the The UK Statistics Authority advising on the promotion and safeguarding of the publication of official statistics.[2]

Recognition

Jowell was awarded the CBE in 2001 and was knighted in the 2008 New Year Honours for services to social science. He was recently the Vice President of the Royal Statistical Society and was awarded the Market Research Society Gold Medal.

Personal life

In 1970 he married psychiatric social worker and fellow Camden London Borough Councillor, Tessa Palmer (now Tessa Jowell) in Hampstead, London. She went on to become a minister in Tony Blair and Gordon Brown's cabinet. They divorced in 1977.
In 1979, he married Nighat Gilani in Camden. They have two sons and divorced in 1995.
In 1996 he married Sharon Witherspoon, now Deputy Director of the Nuffield Foundation, in the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire.


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Monday, January 6, 2014

Khalil Ibrahim, Sudanese Darfuri rebel leader, died he was 54.

Dr. Khalil Ibrahim  was the leader of the Zaghawa-dominated Darfurian rebel group, the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) died he was 54.. [1]

(1957 – 25 December 2011)


Personal life

Ibrahim was born in Sudan in 1957.[2] Ibrahim was from the Koba branch of the Zaghawa ethnic group,[2] which is () located mainly in Sudan, with a minority on the Chad side of the border. He was an enthusiastic supporter of the National Islamic Front (NIF) seizure of power under the direction of Islamist Hassan al-Turabi in 1989. He also served as the state minister for education in Darfur between 1991 and 1994 in al-Fashir, North Darfur. A physician, Dr. Khalil spent four months in 1992 to fight Sudan People's Armed Forces. By Ibrahim's own account, he was disaffected with the Islamist movement by 2000 after seeing the economic neglect of the NIF, as well as its support to armed militias. At this time, he became part of a covert cell of Islamists who were seeking to change the NiF from inside. Dr. Ibrahim went on to serve as the state minister for social affairs in Blue Nile in 1997 before a post as advisor to the governor of Southern Sudan in Juba in 1998. However, others noted that he never received a national level appointment. Ibrahim's colleague in JEM, Ahmad Tugod, stated, "Khalil is not a first or even second class political leader. [...] He struggled all of his life to get a post in Khartoum."[3] He quit the post in August 1998, several months before the end of his appointment, and formed an NGO called "Fighting Poverty". In December 1999, when al-Bashir sidelined al-Turabi with the help of Ali Osman Taha, Dr. Ibrahim was in the Netherlands, studying for a Masters in Public Health at Universiteit Maastricht.
In the meantime, the structure of covert cells that Ibrahim had helped set up in 1994 had spread to Khartoum. The dissidents, dubbing themselves the "The Seekers of Truth and Justice" published the Black Book in 2000, claiming that riverine Arabs dominated political power and resources. Khalil Ibrahim sided with the breakaway Popular Congress party, who had split from President al-Bashir's party.[citation needed] In 2001, he was one of twenty people sent out of the country by the dissidents to go public. In August 2001, Ibrahim published a press release from the Netherlands, in which he announced the formation of the Justice and Equality Movement. The JEM has a relatively small ethnic base of support, being limited to the Kobe Zaghawa, including many kinsmen from across the Chadian border. Ibrahim received political and financial support from Libya and its leader Muammar Gaddafi. After the NTC's win in the 2011 Libyan civil war against the government of the Jamahiriya he was forced to flee back to Darfur.

Darfur conflict

On 5 March 2002, Dr. Ibrahim claimed credit for initiating a government revolt. This apparent claim of the landmark attack on Golo, actually carried out by the Sudan Liberation Army, was mocked by the SLA and the JEM was forced to back away from their announcement. Regardless, the JEM and the anti-government SLA formed a loose alliance in prosecuting the Darfur conflict.
In May 2006, the JEM rejected the Abuja peace process, which was accepted by the faction of the SLA led by Minni Minnawi, but rejected by the smaller SLA factions. On 30 June 2006, Ibrahim, Khamis Abdalla, the leader of an SLM faction, Dr Sharif Harir and Ahmed Ibrahim, co-leaders of the National Democratic Alliance (Sudan), founded the National Redemption Front rebel group in Asmara, Eritrea but which is based in Chad.
Ibrahim lived in exile in Libya from May 2010 to September 2011, when the Libyan civil war compelled him to flee across the Sahara and return to Darfur. The Sudanese government and diplomatic sources accused Ibrahim's group of rebels in Libya of fighting as mercenaries for Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi during the war, charges to which Ibrahim never responded.[4][5]

Death

The Sudan Armed Forces announced that it had killed Ibrahim with an air strike in North Kordofan on 25 December 2011.[2][6]



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Ferenc Schmidt, Hungarian politician, died he was 70.

Ferenc Schmidt was a Hungarian politician of German descent and was a member of the National Assembly (MP) from 1998 to 2010  died he was 70..


(November 6, 1941 – December 25, 2011)[

Career

He was born in Mór, Fejér County, on November 6, 1941. He finished Dózsa György Economical Secondary School in 1960.[2]
He served as a representative of the German minority in the Assembly of Mór Local Government since 1994. He was also a member of the German Minority Municipality from that year. He served as chairman of the German Regional Minority Self-Government of Fejér County between 2007 and 2011.
He was a candidate for position of mayor of Mór in 2002. He was a deputy in the National Assembly as a Fidesz member from 1998 to 2010.[3]


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Ellen Holly best known for her groundbreaking role as Carla Gray on the daytime television series One Life to Live died she was 92

Ellen Holly Ellen Holly.   DISNEY GENERAL ENTERTAINMENT CONTENT VIA GETTY Ellen Holly, born on October 31, 1930, in New York City, passed aw...